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Baby Minaj on admission at the IRC stabilization centre in Hagadera , Dadaab refugee camp. "Using new food aid products for prevention to enhance resiliency“ The nutri butter experience _ Dadaab refugee camp ,Kenya. Dr. K ahindo Maina Public Health Officer UNHCR
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Baby Minajon admission at the IRC stabilization centre in Hagadera, Dadaab refugee camp
"Using new food aid products for prevention to enhance resiliency“The nutri butter experience _ Dadaab refugee camp ,Kenya Dr. KahindoMaina Public Health Officer UNHCR Presentation on behalf of Terry NjeriTheuri, Nutrition officer UNHCR
Background • Nutributter® is a Lipid-based Nutrient Supplement in the form of a ready-to-use paste, intended to fortify the food supplements of young children, aged between 6 and 24 months, and aid in their motor and cognitive development. • Nutributter® does not require any prior cooking or dilution and does not need to be refrigerated. The package is simply opened andthe contents eaten or mixed into the child’s complementary food after it has been cooked and is no longer steaming hot. • Nutributter® is a supplement and does not replace breastfeeding or varied and nutritious complementary foods. Children 6-24 months receiving Nutributter® should continue to be breastfed and to receive their usual complementary foods.
Justification • Anaemia prevalence among under-fives in Dadaab refugee camps exceed 40% thus a public health concern This is consistently due to: household food insecurity (mainly dilution of the food basket through sale of food rations to purchase non-food items, etc.); poor infant and young child feeding practices and high incidences of diseases (RTIs and diarrhea). • Inadequacy of appropriate complementary foods thus children aged 6-23 months have higher malnutrition rates.
Modalities (First Phase) • A 6 month blanket distribution targeting children aged 13-36 months was carried out between January to June 2010. • Older age-group reached since children aged 6-12 months were receiving fresh food vouchers. • UNHCR population database used to screen eligible children on monthly basis. • One 140g jar per child per week (20g per day)
Modalities( First Phase) • Post distribution monitoring indicated high( >90%) acceptability and compliance. • IEC and counseling on appropriate infant young child feeding provided. • 8000-12000 children were reached per month for 6 months
Challenges(First Phase) • Congestion at the SFP sites • Lack of enough staff to take care of the extra work load • Lack of adequate commodity transportation to the SFP centres for distribution • Sharing at the household level
Modalities( Phase 2) • A second phase was started from December 2010 through to August/September 2011. • Children 6-24 months were targeted. • Nutributter was provided in a new package of 20g satchetsper day (monthly basis), providing 110 kcal, 2.6 g protein, 7.0 g lipids and micronutrients including 9 mg iron.
Modalities (Phase 2) The 2nd phase the nutributter intervention was also tied to the objectives below: • Micronutrient Supplementation • Early detection of malnutrition and action taken • Growth monitoring and promotion
Improvements • Distributions were carried out at health-posts and staggered throughout the month to avoid congestion. This was done at the growth monitoring areas • Regular staff specific to growth monitoring and nutributter distribution were recruited. • Intensive information campaign was done including the change in the nutributterpackage • Mobilization and scheduling of beneficiaries also took place prior to the start of the second phase. This was done by staff in the nutrition and outreach program.
Improvements • Standardized messages across the 3 camps were designed on nutributterand translated to Somali. • Questionnaires were developed for post distribution monitoring • Children’s MUAC was taken during the distribution as it was an opportunity to screen and identify malnourished children and those at-risk • The GFD partner on ground provided logistics supporting the transportation of nutributter cartons to the health posts.
Results • Improved recovery rate and reduced length of stay among children in SFP • Nutrition survey conducted after end of the program used as proxy to determine impact. Reduction in malnutrition levels from 13% in 2009 to 5.6% (Hagadera camp), 10% to 7.6% (Ifo) and 14% to 10.7%(Dagahaley) in 2010 could be attributed to nutributter. • Reduction in anaemia prevalence among under-fives could be attributed to nutributter in addition to the other interventions (fresh food vouchers; 6-11 months)
Lessons learnt • Nutributter is an effective mode to deliver essential nutrients to children through complementing locally available foods. • Distribution of nutributter is an opportunity to enhance growth monitoring, IYCF counseling, referral of sick and/or malnourished children for treatment.